Linares Super GM 2003 – Round 9
|
XX International Chess Tournament
Cuidad de Linares 2003 (Cat. XX) |
Round 9 (Monday, March 3, 2003) |
Radjabov, Teimour |
½-½ |
Kasparov, Garry |
Kramnik, Vladimir |
½-½ |
Ponomariov, Ruslan |
Anand, Viswanathan |
½-½ |
Vallejo, Francisco |
|
Finally, a round without an 80+ move endgame! Not that I
don't love a good endgame, because I do, but it's nice to be able to write a
round report without having to go through the Cheron, Averbakh, and Speelman
literary archeology course. We did have endgame positions in round nine, but
this time they ended just when so many of other games really began. The positions
had simplified and all the spectators could understand why the draws were agreed
this time.

What it's like to have black against Vladimir Kramnik
The
battle of the world title holders was the liveliest of the bunch. They infused
the typically stodgy Spanish game with f-pawn breaks and a series of witty tactics.
In the diagram Kramnik tossed 25.Bg5!? on the board, which deserves the
exclam for sheer style points. 25...Bxg5?? 26.e7+ is mate in three.
It was all for naught in the end and after 25...Ng6 26.h4 Nf4
27.Bxf4 exf4 28.g3 f3 29.Rxf3 Rxf3 30.Qxf3 the opposite colored bishops
guaranteed the draw.
With the draw Kramnik wrapped up a victory in the mini-match between
the classical champion and the FIDE champion. Ponomariov appears to have his
feet back on solid ground and after his disastrous start he is +1 in the last
three rounds.
Against
Anand Vallejo played the Berlin that brought him good results in Linares last
year. In 2002 the Spanish teen drew against Anand, Adams, and Shirov with
the Berlin in consecutive blacks to start the event. Then he inexplicably switched
to the Sicilian in the second half and lost all three blacks.
Anand already had a Berlin warm-up in the first round when he
beat Ponomariov. Vallejo did considerably better and held the draw easily. I
confess to having very little to say about these short Berlin draws we see so
often these days. All I know is that if white gets in g4 and f5 black can lose
like Ponomariov did in round one.
Today's opening might be of theoretical interest to those who
enjoy the Berlin and its excruciating move sequences like today's 12...Bd7,
13...Be6, 15...Bd5. Who says chess has nothing in common with checkers?
Gone are the days when Kasparov could confidently play for a win with black
against 1.d4 with the King's Indian and Grunfeld. Both defenses are in intensive
care these days and in need of major theoretical resuscitation. Until then we
have to be content with the likes of the Queen's Gambit and the more peace-loving
Indians.
Quoting
from a Q&A Kasparov gave in 2001, on giving up the KID:
"It’s a difficult opening, positionally it’s very difficult.
It’s not fresh anymore. The KID is one of those openings where you have
to play only the King’s Indian just to defend the position in different
lines. For example, I play the Najdorf. It’s tough, but I spend all my
time analyzing it and I’m confident that I can play it with white or black
with excellent results. But it’s hard to play anything else.
I could play other openings against 1.e4, but if you play the Najdorf you
have to concentrate on it, and when you play the KID you have to concentrate
on that. On a practical level it’s a very tough call. I did it in the
early 90s, playing both the Najdorf and the KID, but I have more faith in the
Najdorf. It creates more counter-chances for black. In the King’s Indian
these days white has already established the right patterns. Whatever they play,
b4 or other lines, you just can’t win. Basically, what’s the point
of having so much trouble when white can play the first twenty moves without
risk?
Years ago I had great scores with the King’s Indian, but now there’s
little danger for white. Now I can play the Queen’s Gambit and get a reasonable
position. Even if it’s a draw, like with Piket and Van Wely in Corus this
year, I can push for a win and I don’t have to suffer so much in the opening."
I
guess Radjabov missed that one because he's still playing the King's Indian!
He hasn't had a chance to do so in Linares because everyone is foaming at the
mouth to take a crack at his French after 1.e4.
Speaking
of the KID, Kasparov faced the Kid in round nine, Teimour Radjabov. The
teen handed Kasparov his first Linares loss in six years in the second round
but had lost three games since then, including his last two. It looked like
this very correct game would be drawn on move 25, with a knight and bishop each
and a completely symmetrical pawn structure. Instead, Radjabov pushed his e-pawn
and Kasparov accepted the challenge, playing 26...f6 in the diagram and
fracturing his pawns.
Things eventually fizzled out after 27.exf6+ gxf6 28.f4 a5
29.Ke3 h6 30.a3 Kd6 31.g4 e5 32.h4 exf4+ 33.Kxf4 Nc5 34.Bc2 Nxd3+ 35.Bxd3 b4
36.axb4 axb4 37.Bf5 Bb7 38.Bc2 Bc8 39.Bf5 Bb7 ½-½. Kudos to
both players for their Linares spirit and playing on until even the playing
hall janitor could see it was a draw.
The headline match in round 10 on Wednesday will be Kasparov-Leko.
The Hungarian co-leader will have had two days off to prepare. (Just had
to toss in a sentence in the future perfect for those ESL readers.) Kasparov
brutally crushed Leko with white in Linares last year in a Lopez so Leko might
return to his well-prepared ..e6 Sicilians. Or might we finally see what Kasparov
has in his laptop against the Sveshnikov?

"Gee, I sure hope Teimour doesn't play the McCutcheon against me, Yuri.
Don't tell him I said that." Peter Leko with trainer and father-in-law
GM Arshak Petrosian (center) and Ponomariov's trainer, GM Yuri Razuvaev
Kasparov has been avoiding the Sveshnikov like many others lately,
playing 3.Nc3 or 3.Bb5 against 2...Nc6. But when Lautier did get a Pelikan against
Kasparov in the Moscow Grand Prix last year he only lasted 31 moves. For those
of you into irrelevant numerical coincidences, that's exactly how many moves
Leko lasted against Kasparov in Linares with black last year. Something tells
me he'll do better this time around. After all, this is Leko 2.0!
Ponomariov and Radjabov match up and let's hope we see more
moves than we got from them in round three. Their 11-move joke was the shortest
game in the Linares supertournament since back in the eighties when semi-retirees
like Portisch and Spassky would yawn through 10 moves and head to the tennis
court or upstairs for a nap. The only recent Linares <15 movers I can remember
were both with Planet Ivanchuk on the white side, so there's not much you can
say there. When Chukky's muse leaves him he may just decide he'd really rather
be out chasing squirrels through the forest.
Mig Greengard
Standings after round nine

Round 1 (Saturday,
February 22, 2003) |
Anand, Viswanathan |
1-0 |
Ponomariov, Ruslan |
Kramnik, Vladimir |
½-½ |
Kasparov, Garry |
Radjabov, Teimour |
0-1 |
Leko, Peter |
|
|
Round 2 (Sunday, February 23,
2003) |
Kasparov, Garry |
0-1 |
Radjabov, Teimour |
Ponomariov, Ruslan |
0-1 |
Kramnik, Vladimir |
Vallejo, Francisco |
½-½ |
Anand, Viswanathan |
|
|
Round 3 (Monday, February 24,
2003) |
Kramnik, Vladimir |
½-½ |
Vallejo, Francisco |
Radjabov, Teimour |
½-½ |
Ponomariov, Ruslan |
Leko, Peter |
½-½ |
Kasparov, Garry |
|
|
Round 4 (Tuesday, February 25,
2003) |
Ponomariov, Ruslan |
½-½ |
Leko, Peter |
Vallejo, Francisco |
½-½ |
Radjabov, Teimour |
Anand, Viswanathan |
½-½ |
Kramnik, Vladimir |
|
|
Round 5 (Thursday, February 27,
2003) |
Radjabov, Teimour |
½-½ |
Anand, Viswanathan |
Leko, Peter |
1-0 |
Vallejo, Francisco |
Kasparov, Garry |
1-0 |
Ponomariov, Ruslan |
|
|
Round 6 (Friday, February 28,
2003) |
Vallejo, Francisco |
½-½ |
Kasparov, Garry |
Anand, Viswanathan |
1-0 |
Leko, Peter |
Kramnik, Vladimir |
1-0 |
Radjabov, Teimour |
|
|
Round 7 (Saturday, March 1, 2003) |
Leko, Peter |
½-½ |
Kramnik, Vladimir |
Kasparov, Garry |
1-0 |
Anand, Viswanathan |
Ponomariov, Ruslan |
1-0 |
Vallejo, Francisco |
|
|
Round 8 (Sunday, March 2, 2003) |
Ponomariov, Ruslan |
½-½ |
Anand, Viswanathan |
Kasparov, Garry |
½-½ |
Kramnik, Vladimir |
Leko, Peter |
1-0 |
Radjabov, Teimour |
|
|
Round 9 (Monday, March 3, 2003) |
Radjabov, Teimour |
½-½ |
Kasparov, Garry |
Kramnik, Vladimir |
½-½ |
Ponomariov, Ruslan |
Anand, Viswanathan |
½-½ |
Vallejo, Francisco |
|
|
Round 10 (Wednesday, March 5,
2003) |
Vallejo, Francisco |
- |
Kramnik, Vladimir |
Ponomariov, Ruslan |
- |
Radjabov, Teimour |
Kasparov, Garry |
- |
Leko, Peter |
Games – Report
|
|
Round 11 (Thursday, March 6, 2003) |
Leko, Peter |
- |
Ponomariov, Ruslan |
Radjabov, Teimour |
- |
Vallejo, Francisco |
Kramnik, Vladimir |
- |
Anand, Viswanathan |
Games – Report |
|
Round 12 (Friday, March 7, 2003) |
Anand, Viswanathan |
- |
Radjabov, Teimour |
Vallejo, Francisco |
- |
Leko, Peter |
Ponomariov, Ruslan |
- |
Kasparov, Garry |
Games – Report |
|
Round 13 (Saturday, March 8, 2003) |
Kasparov, Garry |
- |
Vallejo, Francisco |
Leko, Peter |
- |
Anand, Viswanathan |
Radjabov, Teimour |
- |
Kramnik, Vladimir |
Games – Report |
|
Round 14 (Sunday, March 9, 2003) |
Kramnik, Vladimir |
- |
Leko, Peter |
Anand, Viswanathan |
- |
Kasparov, Garry |
Vallejo, Francisco |
- |
Ponomariov, Ruslan |
Games – Report |
|